A New View of Insanity: The Duality of the Mind Proved by the Structure, Functions, and Diseases of the Brain, and by the Phenomena of Mental Derangement, and Shewn to be Essential to Moral Responsibility. With an Appendix ... |
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Page xi
... Reason . - Jacobi's Remarks on the Intellect of Insects . -Ratiocination of an Elephant and of Spiders . CHAPTER XXV.-Dr. Macnish , on the Philosophy of Sleep . - Argu- mentative Dreams . - Conscience . - Somnambulism . - Absence of ...
... Reason . - Jacobi's Remarks on the Intellect of Insects . -Ratiocination of an Elephant and of Spiders . CHAPTER XXV.-Dr. Macnish , on the Philosophy of Sleep . - Argu- mentative Dreams . - Conscience . - Somnambulism . - Absence of ...
Page xii
... Reason why there should be Two Organs of Thought . — Mr . Hewitt Watson's Essay on the use of the Double Brain - CHAPTER XXIX . -- Power of abstaining from Evil . Calvinistic Doctrines . - Great Concert of Nature . - Effect of the new ...
... Reason why there should be Two Organs of Thought . — Mr . Hewitt Watson's Essay on the use of the Double Brain - CHAPTER XXIX . -- Power of abstaining from Evil . Calvinistic Doctrines . - Great Concert of Nature . - Effect of the new ...
Page xiv
... Reason seem to be the very foundation of all positive knowledge ; and when these researches can be pursued by means of physical evidence , it is clearly an imperative duty to exhaust , as far as possible , all such testimony , before we ...
... Reason seem to be the very foundation of all positive knowledge ; and when these researches can be pursued by means of physical evidence , it is clearly an imperative duty to exhaust , as far as possible , all such testimony , before we ...
Page 2
... Reason seem to be the very foundation of all positive knowledge ; and when these researches can be pursued by means of physical evidence , it is clearly an imperative duty to exhaust , as far as possible , all such testimony , before we ...
... Reason seem to be the very foundation of all positive knowledge ; and when these researches can be pursued by means of physical evidence , it is clearly an imperative duty to exhaust , as far as possible , all such testimony , before we ...
Page 8
... reason I naturally thought might have operated with others as well as myself , and would perhaps account for the silence of so many writers on a subject of such great interest and importance . Longer consideration , and more extensive ...
... reason I naturally thought might have operated with others as well as myself , and would perhaps account for the silence of so many writers on a subject of such great interest and importance . Longer consideration , and more extensive ...
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3d Edition action Anatomy animal ANTHONY TODD THOMSON attention believe body brain called cause cerebellum cerebral cerebrum cloth COMPARATIVE ANATOMY complete comprehend conceive conscious conviction corpus callosum cultivated degree delusion destroyed disease disorder disturbance doctrine effect endeavoured entirely established example excite exercise existence explain eyes fact faculties feeling fibres functions gentleman give gradually habits human ideas impulse indulgence inferences influence injury insanity intellect JOHN LINDLEY JOSEPH SWAN manifest Materia Medica medulla oblongata ment mind mode moral morbid nature nerves nervous object observed opinion organ passed patient perception perfect perfectly perhaps persons phenomena phrenologists physical physician Plates portion position possession practice present produce propensities reason remarkable result seems sensation sense shew sleep sometimes soul sound structure suppose Surgeon theory thing tion trains of thought TREATISE treatment University of Göttingen volition whole Woodcuts writer
Popular passages
Page 200 - And thou shalt grope at noonday, as the blind gropeth in darkness, and thou shalt not prosper in thy ways: and thou shalt be only oppressed and spoiled evermore, and no man shall save thee.
Page 71 - I pictured to my mind the figures of such persons, I never once could succeed in my desire of seeing them externally ; though I had some short time before seen them as phantoms, and they had perhaps afterwards unexpectedly presented themselves to me in the same manner.
Page 256 - ... had been ten days confined with her first child, when suddenly, having her eyes fixed upon it, she was seized with the desire of strangling it. This idea made her shudder ; she carried the infant to its cradle, and went out in order to get rid of so horrid a thought. The cries of the little being who required nourishment, recalled her to the house; she experienced still more strongly the impulse to destroy it. She hastened away again, haunted by the dread of committing a crime so horrible; she...
Page 73 - I had no recollection of having previously seen. For about twenty-four hours I had constantly before me a human figure, the features and dress of which were as distinctly visible as that of any real existence, and of which, after an interval of many years. I still retain the most lively impression ; yet neither at the time nor since have I been able to discover any person whom I had previously seen who resembled it.
Page 86 - Miserere of Mozart, the music ceased, and there was an absolute silence. The coffin, which was placed on a kind of altar covered with black cloth (united to the black cloth which covered the pavement), sank down so slowly through the floor, that it was only in measuring its progress by some brilliant object beyond it that any motion could be perceived. I had fallen into a sort of torpid reverie, when I was recalled to consciousness by a paroxysm of violent grief on the part of the bereaved husband,...